A research project in the College of Engineering and Computer Science (CECS) is “a problem solver,” according to Mr. Steve Douglas of TVA.
That’s why the power-generation company was in the college’s Electrical Power System Analysis (ETAP) lab on November 13, donating a $50,000 check to keep the research going, said Mr. Douglas, vice president of nuclear oversight at TVA, and member of the CECS Advisory Board Steering Committee.
“The university is trying to look for opportunities for applied research and we are looking for opportunities to collaborate with the university in ways that solve problems for us,” he said.
Without TVA’s support, “we would not be able to do what we’re doing here,” said Dr. Ahmed Eltom, head of the Department of Electrical Engineering.
The money funds a project that has discovered a method of diagnosing potential problems within transformers in nuclear power plants that doesn’t involve physically removing the transformer and sending it off to be tested. Onsite testing can save millions of dollars.
“There are very expensive ways of sending them (transformers) back to the test site,” says Dr. Abdelrahman Karrar, who is heading the research project.
This important research project “is beneficial to not only TVA but to the whole nuclear industry,” says Mr. Douglas.
The UTC research project has been praised at various industry conferences over the past few years. For instance, out of about 1,400 entries, a paper detailing the project was one of four “Best of the Best” award winners at the worldwide Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) Power and Energy Conference in 2016.
Leave a Reply